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School of Undergraduate Studies
1. Journal Articles
Association of Care Practices with Suicide Attempts in US Veterans Prescribed Opioid Medications for Chronic Pain Management
Im, Jinwoo J.
;
Shachter, Ross D.
;
Oliva, Elizabeth M.
;
Henderson, Patricia T.
;
Paik, Meenah C.
;
Trafton, Jodie A.
School of Undergraduate Studies
1. Journal Articles
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Title
Association of Care Practices with Suicide Attempts in US Veterans Prescribed Opioid Medications for Chronic Pain Management
Issued Date
2015-07
Citation
Journal of General Internal Medicine, v.30, no.7, pp.979 - 991
Type
Article
Author Keywords
opioid therapy
;
suicide attempt
;
clinical practice guideline
Keywords
Adult
;
Article
;
CHRONIC NONCANCER PAIN
;
Chronic Pain
;
Clinical Practice Guideline
;
Disease Association
;
DISORDERS
;
Drug Screening
;
Female
;
Follow Up
;
Health Care Practice
;
HISTORY
;
Human
;
Major Clinical Study
;
Male
;
MENTAL-HEALTH
;
Mood Disorder
;
Opiate
;
Opioid Therapy
;
OVERDOSE
;
Patient Risk
;
Practice Guideline
;
Prescription
;
PRESCRIPTION OPIOIDS
;
Retrospective Study
;
RISK
;
Risk Assessment
;
SUBSTANCE USE
;
Suicide Attempt
;
THOUGHTS
;
United States
;
Veterans Health
ISSN
0884-8734
Abstract
IMPORTANCE: Patients receiving opioid therapy are at elevated risk of attempting suicide. Guidelines recommend practices to mitigate risk, but it is not known whether these are effective. OBJECTIVE: Our aim was to examine associations between the receipt of guideline-recommended care for opioid therapy and risk of suicide attempt. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: This was a retrospective analysis of administrative data for all Veteran patients prescribed any short-acting opioids on a chronic basis or any long-acting opioids from the Veterans Health Administration during fiscal year 2010. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES: Multivariate, mixed-effects logistic regression analyses were conducted to define the associations between the risk of suicide attempt and receipt of guideline-recommended care at the individual level and rates of use of recommended care at the facility level, while accounting for patient risk factors. RESULTS: At the individual level, having a mood disorder was highly associated with suicide attempts (odds ratios [ORs] = 3.5, 3.9; 95% confidence intervals [CIs] = 3.3–3.9, 3.3–4.6 for chronic short-acting and long-acting groups, respectively). At the facility level, patients on opioid therapy within the facilities ordering more drug screens were associated with decreased risk of suicide attempt (ORs = 0.2, 0.3; CIs = 0.1–0.3, 0.2–0.6 for chronic short-acting and long-acting groups, respectively). In addition, patients on long-acting opioid therapy within the facilities providing more follow-up after new prescriptions were associated with decreased risk of suicide attempt (OR = 0.2, CI = 0.0–0.7), and patients on long-acting opioid therapy within the facilities having higher sedative co-prescription rates were associated with increased risk of suicide attempt (OR = 20.3, CI = 1.1–382.2). CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE: Encouraging facilities to make more consistent use of drug screening, provide follow-up within 4weeks for patients initiating new opioid prescriptions, and avoid sedative co-prescription in combination with long-acting opioids may help prevent suicide attempts. Some clinicians may selectively employ guideline-recommended practices with at-risk patients. © 2015, Society of General Internal Medicine.
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11750/5184
DOI
10.1007/s11606-015-3220-y
Publisher
Springer Nature
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